M45 - The Pleiades Open Cluster in Taurus
M45 - The Pleiades Open Cluster in Taurus
M45 - The Pleiades Open Cluster in Taurus
M45 is one of the most prominent objects in the night sky. To the naked eye, the Pleiades looks like a miniature Little Dipper. Observers with good vision will easily identify 7 stars, and this gives the Pleiades its nickname - the Seven Sisters. In actuality, the cluster contains over 1,000 stars.

The cluster is a very young cluster, and is dominated by hot, blue stars. M45 is passing through a dust cloud in the Milky Way. As a result, the blue light from the brightest stars reflects off the background dust, thus causing the blue nebulosity surrounding the cluster.

In this image, North is Up. This image is cropped to 95% of the original frame.

Exposure Details
Lens Celestron C-8 SCT with Celestron focal reducer
Focal Length 1260mm
Focal Ratio f/6.3
 
Mount Schaefer GEM - 7 1/2
Guiding 80mm f/11 guidescope with PHD Guiding
 
Camera Canon 450D - Gary Honis modified
Exposure 117 subexposures of 180 seconds each at ISO 1600 - over 5 3/4 hours total
Calibration 30 darks, 30 flats, 30 bias
 
Date December 14 and 22, 2011
Temperature 31F on 12/14, 34F on 12/22
SQM Reading
Seeing 3/5 on both nights
Location Pine Mountain Club, California
 
Software Used Images Plus 4.0 for camera control, calibration, and stacking. Images Plus 4.5 for digital development, and multiresolution sharpening, smoothing and noise reuction. Photoshop CS5 levels and curves, color correction, high pass filter, star shrinking, saturation adjustments, lab color, smart sharpen, screen mask invert, match color, HDR toning and multilayer luminance combining. Gradient Xterminator for gradient removal. Carboni Tools for additional saturation adjustments, noise reduction, and smoothing. HLVG for additional color correction.
Notes This astrophotograph includes images taken from the very first night I used my new Gary Honis modified Canon 450D. Although the modification is designed to enhance red objects, I was very excited to see how well the new camera performed - even on this predominantly blue target. Additionally, the camera picked up a great deal of red in many of the stars, as well as some very subtle red in portions of the dust. I'm very excited about the potential the new camera shows.

This is the second processing of this image. A previous processing of this image won 1st place in Digital Astro's Challenge Photo - Star Cluster category for December 2011.

A previous processing of this image also earned 2nd place in Astrophotogallery.org's December 2011 "Easy-Open Cluster" category.

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